4. Totally useless fact: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx campus talk october 2006 1
CAMPUS TALK IS A COLLEGE STUDENT’S BEST FRIEND
Gadgets • Movies • Celebs • Nightlife • Jokes • Tonsof funnystuff
www.mycampustalk.comMARCH2013
An Interviewwith SYTYCD
Competitor Lauren Gottlieb
A Prep Course forthe
Zombie
Apocalypse
A Look IntoWeb Movement
THE HAWKEYE
INITIATIVE
St. Paddy’s
DayA Sobering Celebration?
Life in a College Town
(Minusthe College)
5. campus talk | march 201358
GETTHESE INYOUR LIFE!
By Daniel Sutphin
FAVI Entertainment: SmartStick
Although convenient, Smart TVs can still run a little high for a college budget.
FAVI’s SmartStick is an affordable plug and play device that allows you to browse
the internet, watch your favorite movies, music, apps and games on any HDTV. You
can access thousands of apps available via Android Marketplace HBO GO, Flixter,
YouTube, Pandora and much more. The device is also Plug and Play, which means
no subscriptions are needed. startingat$49.99www.favientertainment.com
Tagg: The
Pet TrackerNo matter how you might try to protect your pet, there will always
be that underlying fear of them getting away or disappearing.
Tagg is a solution to help ensure that your pets are
safe and healthy. With GPS tracking,
Tagg makes certain your pets are
where they are supposed to be.
If your pet isn’t getting its
vet-recommended amount
of exercise, you can also
track where it has been.
$99.95
www.pettracker.com
Bitemyapple.co
The Snooze
A perfect accessory for your mobile device, the
Snooze is a sleek and unique bedside dock
designed to eliminate the‘morning fumbles’
and get you to class on time. The Snooze is
crafted from solid, Maple or Oak in a variety
of finishes. Slide the Apple smart phone
horizontally into the cut out tracks for a secure,
safe fit. A non-slip, silicone bottom allows for a
firm grip on the bedside tabletop, and a large
rubber top serves as a giant snooze button.
$39.99www.bitemyapple.co
bEm wireless:
mobile speakerThe new bēm wireless speaker provides precision-tuned
sound wherever you go. The speaker measures smaller than
a tennis ball and is great for on-the-go use and travelers. The
wireless range stretches 40 feet and a mini USB port charges
the device. There is also an Aux In and Aux Out for the
connection of other devices.
$69.99www.bemwireless.com
Totally useless fact:“Dreamt”is the only English word that ends in the letters“mt”.
6.
7.
8.
9. Dan Busken was in another
field when his dad asked him
to join Busken Bakery. The
family’s legacy helped cinch
the deal. Business, G1
AT BUSKEN,
SUCCESSFUL
SUCCESSION
NUMBER TO KNOW
$2 billion
The amount spent by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
in disaster relief for shelter, restor-
ing power and other immediate
needs arising from Sandy, the Oct.
29 storm that pounded the Atlan-
tic Coast from North Carolina to
Maine with hurricane-force winds
and coastal flooding. New York,
New Jersey and Connecticut were
the hardest hit.
WASHINGTON — Conserva-
tivesandwatchdoggroupsare
mounting a “not-so-fast” cam-
paign against a $50.7 billion
aid package to states hit by Su-
perstorm Sandy even as
Northeastern governors and
lawmakers hope to push it
through the House this week.
The critics’ complaint is
that much of the money law-
makers are considering will
actually go toward recovery
efforts for past disasters and
otherprojectsunrelatedtothe
late-October storm.
A $60.4 billion storm-aid
package passed by the Senate
in December, for example, in-
cluded $150 million for what
the Commerce Department
described as fisheries disas-
ters in Alaska, Mississippi and
the Northeast, and $50 million
in subsidies for replanting
trees on private land damaged
by wildfires. It also included
$188 million for an Amtrak ex-
pansion project with only an
indirect link to Sandy: Offi-
cials say that new, long-
planned tunnels from New
Jersey to Penn Station in Man-
hattan would be better pro-
Relief package too helpful, critics charge
Supposed response to Sandy would help 47 states, cover three years
By Andrew Miga
Associated Press
See STORM AID, Page A12
T
he rifles, pistols
and shotguns al-
ways look impres-
sive when they’re
displayed at press
conferences cele-
brating the end of gun buy-
back campaigns.
Spread across tables or
piled high into overflowing
stacks, all those weapons
reinforce the notion that
trading cash for guns works. It gets guns off
the street, organizers say, and makes the city
safer.
The problem, according to years of re-
search, is that it does neither.
Cincinnati will join a growing list of cities
this week that have embraced gun buyback
programs in the wake of the Sandy Hook Ele-
mentary massacre in Con-
necticut.ThefirstofCincin-
nati’s three planned gun
buybacks for 2013 is Tues-
day in North Fairmount.
The local campaign be-
gins as the national debate
over gun violence is intensi-
fying, and as President Ba-
rack Obama awaits recom-
mendations this week from
his task force on gun-relat-
ed crime.
Researchers who have evaluated gun con-
trol strategies say buybacks – despite their
popularity – are among the least effective
waystoreducegunviolence.Theysaytarget-
ed police patrols, intervention efforts with
OFFTARGET
THEY DON’T GET WEAPONS OFF THE STREETS,
EXPERTS SAY, BUT BACKERS KEEP TRYING
DAN
HORN
I write about news that impacts
your community, whether it
happens around the world or
around the corner. Email me at
dhorn@enquirer.com.
ENQUIRER ILLUSTRATION/ JEFF RUBLE
Gun buybacks more popular than effective
GUN BUYBACKS AND THEIR EFFECTIVENESS
Poll: Will local gun buyback programs have an impact on gun crime? At Cincinnati.com.
See BUYBACKS, Page A12
THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRERCINCINNATI.COM
FN SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 2013
$2.00 retail
Portions of
today’s
Enquirer were
printed on
recycled paper
Copyright 2013,
The Cincinnati Enquirer
High 59°
Low 26°
Rain, cooler
WEATHER
Complete
forecast:
A2
AE...................D1
Business............G1
Classified ......H1, I1
Forum ................F1
History...............B5
Local..................B1
Puzzles..............D4
Sports................C1
TV............TV Week
Lotteries............A2
Obituaries .........B8
Opinions............F2
INDEX Nine sections,172nd year, No. 279
Oklahoma’s “right-to-work” law is either a
stunning success or an abject failure.
It has created jobs and driven economic
growth, as business leaders say, or it has lowered
wages and hurt workers, as labor unions claim. It
is the reason unemployment
is low in Oklahoma, or it is
preventing the state from do-
ing even better.
As Ohioans debate wheth-
er to embrace right-to-work,
which bans mandatory union
membership and dues, Okla-
homa’s decade-long experi-
ment is a testament to the
challenges of measuring the
law’s impact.
Although 24 states have
now adopted right-to-work –
historically pro-union Michi-
gan is the latest – it’s still unclear whether the law
has helped, hurt or done a little bit of both.
“I found no convincing statistical evidence
that right-to-work did anything,” said Mike
Hicks, an economist at Ball State University who
has studied similar laws nationwide. “It just
didn’t really have an effect.”
Other independent economists have reached
Success hard
to measure
in states with
right-to-work
ENQUIRER IN-DEPTH: It’s
credited for boosting jobs but
blamed for lowering wages
Strikes and lockouts involving unions with more
than 1,000 members have fallen along with union
membership. The last big lockout or strike involving
a union in Ohio or Kentucky was in 2011 at Cooper
Tire in Findlay.
How work stoppages have shrunk
0
100
200
300
400
500
1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001 2011
Numberofstrikes
Year
1.5 million
1.0 million1.0 million1.0 million
2.5 million
729,000
392,000
99,000 113,000
Source: U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics
The Enquirer/Mike Nyerges
Circle sizesCircle sizes
represent numberrepresent number
of workersof workers
Circle sizes
represent number
of workers
See WORK, Page A10
By Dan Horn | dhorn@enquirer.com
COMPARE
THE STATES
Use our
interactive map
at Cincinnati.com
to compare
right-to-work
states’ records on
unemployment,
income and union
membership to
other states.
WINTER ARTS SCENE
Our picks for lifting the
mood of the months
ahead. AE, Section D
THE BENGALS SEASON
A look back at 2012,
with our final grades.
Sports, C1
$200
IN SAVINGS
INSIDE!
CE-0000539699
10. THE ENQUIRER4 December 13, 2012
technology home entertainment
GANNETT
Video game
hotlist
Tech tools toys
roundupOur critics’picks of the hottest new games for console
systems, portable systems and home computers
A summary of hip new electronics
products and computer gear
For ages 16 older
Touchscreen gloves
Data bracelet
Wearable speaker
n ‘Batman: Arkham City
Armored Edition’
One of the more impressive launch
titles for Nintendo’s new Wii U is a
supersized version of 2011’s “Batman:
Arkham City” from Warner Bros.
Interactive Entertainment. The lengthy
single-player adventure builds upon
its predecessor with all downloadable
content preloaded, plus exclusive
features that take advantage of the Wii
U GamePad controller. In “Batman:
Arkham City Armored Edition,” part
of Gotham City is now sealed off
and used as a maximum security
prison. You’ll foil the scheming plots
of super-villains, protect the innocent
and attempt to bring order to the
chaos. Tap the Wii U GamePad, which
houses a 6.2-inch touchscreen, to
access objectives, select gadgets,
upgrade gear, detonate explosive
gel and scour the area for forensic
evidence.
Rating: T (Teen); alcohol reference,
blood, mild language, suggestive
themes, use of tobacco, violence.
Publisher: Warner Bros.
Entertainment Inc., www.facebook.
com/batmanarkhamcity.
Platforms: Nintendo Wii U.
Price: $59.99.
For ages 6 older
n ‘Disney Epic Mickey 2:
The Power ofTwo’
A sequel to 2010’s “Epic Mickey,”
“Disney Epic Mickey 2: The Power of
Two” continues the play mechanics
that made the first game unique
and fresh. Mickey borrows a magic
paintbrush and heads into Wasteland,
a place for discarded or forgotten
toons. The brush can stream paint,
which fixes and brightens up this
cartoon world, or it can unleash
thinner, which destroys or reveals
hidden things. In every scene, your
decision to use paint or thinner affects
what happens next in the game and
has long-term consequences in the
story as well. “Epic Mickey “ is a long
game filled with lovingly researched
Disney history, loads of collectibles,
musical numbers and an interesting
but drawn-out story. But the platform
jumping, difficult battles and
unpredictable create a inconsistent
game experience. This game is best
played with a friend.
Rating: E (Everyone), cartoon
violence.
Publisher: Disney Interactive,
www.epicmickey.com.
Platform: Nintendo Wii U and Wii,
Microsoft Xbox 360, Sony PlayStation
3, PC/Mac.
Price: $59.99; $49.99 for Wii.
This pair of winter gloves interacts
with touchscreens on phones, tablets
and other portable devices. The
aptly named Digits winter gloves from
Moshi have conductive fiber on the
fingertips, feature an inner silicone
pattern for a more secure grip and
are lined with micro-fleece for extra
warmth. Available in dark gray for
large and extra large sizes and light
gray for small and medium sizes.
Available: store.moshimonde.com.
$30.
n Keep your data close at hand with
PNY’s 8GB Bracelet Attache Female
USB 2.0 Flash Drive. Designed
to wear on your wrist, the flashy
accessory doubles as an 8GB USB
drive. Reversible, it’s available in a
variety of patterns and colors.
Available: Staples.
Price: $12.99
n Hear the beat up close and
personal with the BOOM Urchin,
a Bluetooth speaker that can be
attached to a belt loop or backpack
with a carbineer. The portable
speaker also can be attached to a
shower wall with the included suction
cup or to another surface with the
included screw mount. Equipped
with a built-in microphone and a mini
jack, the device also doubles as a
speaker for your phone. Covered
with an interchangeable silicone skin,
the water-resistant speaker can be
recharged via a USB connection.
Available: www.boommovement.com.
Price: $149.99.
Go-go types need go-go gadgets
Fast
company
USA TODAY
N
umerous high-tech travel products hit
the market in the past year, most of
which could become valuable items
in a road warrior’s equipment stash.
GANNETT
products and compute
Touc
n This pa
with touch
and other
aptly nam
Moshi hav
fingertips
pattern fo
are lined w
warmth. A
large and
gray for s
Available
Price: $30
n
websites. $149.99; find a retailer at www.samsung.com.
n Weighing less than 5
ounces, the Sierra Wireless
4G LTE Tri-Fi Hotspot hooks
up as many as eight devices
to the Internet via a 4G or 3G
network. $99.99 with two-year
contract at www.sprint.com.
n The Zaggsparq 6000 pro-
vides up to four full recharges
for a smartphone and has two
USB ports to charge more
than one device at a time.
$99.99 at www.zagg.com.
n Lenovo’s Think-
Pad Tablet 2, which
runs Windows 8
or Windows 8 Pro,
operates for more
than 10 hours on
a single charge,
weighs less than
1¼ pounds and
has dual micro-
phones for video-
conferencing. $699
at Microsoft stores
n FAVI Entertainment’s Mini Bluetooth Keyboard connects with nearly
all Bluetooth devices. It has a built-in laser pointer and PowerPoint
slide buttons for presentations. $49.99 at www.favientertainment.com.
January 2013
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17. A great workplace is something to be proud of. If you work for
an awesome company, show your appreciation and nominate them at:
Show your appreciation.
www.bayareanewsgroup.com/
topworkplaces
$106
IN MONEY-
SAVING
COUPONS
INSIDE
2
BAY AREA NEWS GROUP » 2.7 MILLION BAY AREA READERS WEEKLY IN PRINT AND ONLINE $1.00 VALLEY 103 JANUARY 13, 2013
Sunday
WEATHER PAGE B10
Sunny
H: 47-50
L: 29-31
INDEX
Ask Amy .......... D6
Classified ...... CL3
Comics.......Inside
Local news .......B1
Lottery..............A2
Movies............. D4
Obituaries ....... B6
Opinion...........A12
People ............. A4
Puzzles............ D6
Television .........D7
BAY AREA NEWS APPS
DownloadBayAreaNews
toyouriPadandiPhonefor
newsfromacrosstheregion A NEWSPAPER
SUBSCRIBE » 800-870-6397orhttps://
www.subscriberconcierge.com/sanjose
Copyright 2013 San Jose Mercury News
SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS SUNDAY
By Julia Prodis Sulek and Josh Richman
Staff writers
Heawoketoanoiseinthemiddleofthenight.
Was it coming from inside his San Jose home?
The back patio? Bijan Moeinzadeh couldn’t
tell. But his instincts immediately kicked in: He
grabbed the .357 revolver from a lockbox in his
bedroom and slipped it in his pocket.
Inching toward the noise, he discovered
a stranger riffling through belongings on his
porch. The patio light and a shout scared off
the intruder. The gun never left Moeinzadeh’s
pocket, but the Navy medic who recently re-
turned from Afghanistan — and who learned
to shoot as a Boy Scout and often practices at
a San Jose firing range — said he felt safer for
having it.
“If I felt I was under threat,” Moeinzadeh,
25, said of that encounter a few years ago, “I
could have gone for it.”
With the country embroiled in a polarizing
debate over gun control after a series of mass
shootings, many gun supporters passionately
AN ISSUE OF SAFETY
Experts:
Guns and
good guys
don’t mix
Bay Area cases show weapons
drawn in self-defense have made
tense situations more dangerous
LIFESTYLE
Gym clothes: If you
look good, you feel
good working out
LIVE GOLDEN GLOBES COVERAGE
JOIN CHAT AT 3 P.M.; FIND FASHION PHOTOS
AND MORE AT WWW.MERCURYNEWS.COM/
ACADEMY-AWARDS
49ERSPLAYOFFS2013
WHATARUSH!
49ERS IN ROUTKAEPERNICK RACKS UP QB RECORD 181 YARDS ON THE GROUND
IN A PERFORMANCE THAT REIGNITES FANS’ SUPER BOWL DREAMS
SAN FRANCISCO 45, GREEN BAY 31
MORE 49ERS PLAYOFFCOVERAGE
Monte Poole: Kaepernick’s playoff
debut was one for the ages. PAGE C1
Tim Kawakami: Harbaugh proves
his acuity as he makes the right call
in the playoffs — again. PAGE C1
Online extra: Scan this
code to view a photo gal-
lery or go to http://pho-
tos.mercurynews.com.
Read more 49ers coverage at
www.mercurynews.com/49ers.
MARK PURDY
COLUMNIST
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF
Colin Kaepernick’s play Saturday justified coach Jim Harbaugh’s decision to start him over Alex Smith.
By Matthias Gafni
mgafni@bayareanewsgroup.com
Dennis Stanworth is a member of the notori-
ous class of ’72.
More than 100 death row inmates were
spared the gas chamber in 1972 after the Cali-
fornia Supreme Court ruled capital punish-
ment unconstitutional.
His classmates all got life sentences, includ-
ing the likes of serial killer Charles Manson
and Sirhan Sirhan, Robert F. Kennedy’s assas-
sin. But not all served their full sentences, and
some who were released went on to commit
new crimes.
Last week, Stanworth — who killed two Pi-
STANWORTH CASE
After slaying,
victims groups
question parole
Some spared gas chamber by ’72
ruling killed again after release
KARL MONDON/STAFF
A firsthand account: Bijan Moeinzadeh, a Navy
medic, found an intruder on his porch a few years
ago.“If I felt I was under threat, I could have gone
for it.”Above, he takes target practice at the Field
Sports Park shooting range in San Jose.
Inside: Oakland reacts to a violent Friday that left
four people dead and has resulted in one city of-
ficial calling for a state of emergency. PAGE B7
See STANWORTH, Page 15
See GUNS, Page 5
SAN FRANCISCO
— Colin Kaepernick was
running. He was running
fast. He was running so fast
Saturday night that on his
56-yard touchdown sprint in
the third quarter, one of his
tattoos fell off at the 5-yard
line. Seemed like it, anyway.
Colin Kaepernick was throw-
ing. He was throwing the ball with
such zip and accuracy, his receivers
merely had to stick out their hands
and — thwap! — the passes would
hit their mitts and stick as if they
were flies to flypaper.
The 49ers are advanc-
ing. They are advancing in
the playoffs. Impressively.
In fact, after their 45-31
victory over Green Bay at
Candlestick Park, even the
most skeptical pessimist/
hater/naysayer must begin
to think seriously about a Super
Bowl trip.
And yes, the facts in those last
three paragraphs are all intercon-
See PURDY, Page 15